1 big thing: Putin meets Xi in Beijing

Russian President Vladimir Putin is on a state visit to China, which will include attending the 18th Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit June 9-10.

What we're hearing: Chinese President Xi Jinping awarded Putin the inaugural friendship medal of the People's Republic of China and praised his "contribution and efforts to building a peaceful world." According to the Xinhua readout:

The two leaders agreed that China and Russia should adhere to the concept of everlasting friendship and the spirit of strategic coordination, and expand and deepen cooperation in all areas...

Xi described China-Russia comprehensive strategic partnership of coordination as "mature, stable and solid."

No matter how international situations change, China and Russia always firmly support each other in defending their respective core interests, deepen cooperation in all areas, jointly and actively participate in global governance, and play a pivotal role in establishing a new type of international relations and building a community with a shared future for humanity, Xi said.

They are also expected to discuss North Korea and the upcoming summit between North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and President Trump.

Why it matters: Many Western observers dismiss the Xi-Putin bromance as a tenuous friendship that poses no real challenge to the West. There are many points of potential friction in the China-Russia relationship but it is risky to dismiss this renewed friendship too quickly as both Xi and Putin see massive opportunities from Trump's approach to foreign relations.

2. Chinese lessons for ZTE

The details of the deal, per a report on the settlement by official news agency Xinhua (美国商务部与中兴公司达成新和解协议):

"[The deal] is a bill that must be paid by a multinational firm that violated a contractual obligation...consequences that must be borne as the result of contempt for laws and regulations."

Chinese firms with international business should have international standards and not be "giant babies...who use commercial interests to coerce the government."

But Xinhua also details the process Beijing went through to save ZTE and states that "a powerful and self-confident government is a firm backup for the people."

Not stated by Xinhua, but clearly another big lesson for PRC firms from this case, is "don't get caught."

Why it matters: The ZTE mess was another wakeup call about China's vulnerability to foreign technology, but it may also be used as a negative educational example to improve compliance and global behavior by the increasing numbers of PRC firms going global.

What's next: Some members of U.S. Congress want to block the deal, but it appears unlikely they will succeed. And so far there are few details about the insertion into the company of a U.S. compliance team.

The big questions: Who decides who's on that team, and will it end up being a huge payday for big U.S. law, consulting and accounting firms? Will Beijing assume that some or all of the members of the compliance team are working for U.S. intelligence?

3. Increased scrutiny of U.S. ties to Huawei

Quick take: These queries highlight the political and reputation risk to any American firm doing business with Huawei. Every U.S. company with a Huawei deal needs to weigh whether the upside is worth the increasingly inevitable backlash in this New Era of U.S.-China Relations...

4. Chinese tech can't escape party politics

Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios

Axios' Erica Pandey writes: China's biggest tech companies have thrived at home, easily beating out what little foreign competition they face and monopolizing several industries at once — but at a steep cost.

China's tech darlings have free rein, as foreign competitors like Amazon and Facebook face barriers to entry and regulations on Chinese domestic companies allow them to set up monopolies on the market.

But that free rein stops when they attract attention from the Communist Party in one of two ways, says Derek Scissors, an expert on China's economy at the American Enterprise Institute — they either get too big or enter strategic sectors.

The party has already demonstrated its willingness to go to lengths to maintain control over Chinese commerce.

The chairman of Anbang, Wu Xiaohui, was swiftly charged with fraud and sentenced to 18 years in prison as part of a party crackdown on risky corporate spending.

Chinese billionaire Wang Jianlin turned heads when he announced he was selling off international assets and focusing on domestic investments.

The bottom line: The Chinese government gives its corporate champions nearly unfettered access to the country's 770 million internet users, but that comes with the fear that Xi could make it disappear in an instant. And as China's tech giants get bigger and richer, the Communist Party gets more nervous.

Go deeper: Read Erica's full story here and check out Axios' Ina Fried's piece on "Why our tech battles with China are so complicated."

The company now serves more users than some of China’s largest banks, which themselves are considered global systemically important financial institutions by the Financial Stability Board, an international body that monitors the global financial system.

My thought bubble: Ant Financial is too big to fail but has expanded so quickly that the regulators have not kept up. A more mature and stable regulatory environment may actually be good for the company.

6. Xiaomi to be the first to list CDRs on exchange

Smartphone giant Xiaomi has submitted the first application to PRC regulators to list Chinese Depository Receipts (CDR) on the domestic A-share exchange at the same time it has its IPO in Hong Kong.

Background: The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) issued detailed rules earlier this week for the long-awaited CDR program which will for the first time offer PRC domestic investors onshore access to trading in shares of some of the country's biggest internet and tech firms.

Earlier this week regulators also approved six money managers to establish funds totaling nearly $50 billion to invest in the coming wave of tech unicorn CDRs.

The bottom line: A great wall of cash awaits these tech CDRs and PRC punters may drive their valuation multiples inside China far higher than those outside China, which should lead to all sorts of interesting arbitrage opportunities for savvy investors.

Plus, the massive amounts of capital available to PRC tech entrepreneurs along with increasingly viable paths to liquidity inside China should help the country overcome much of the “innovation tax” that stems from the political controls.

7. U.S. Embassy in China issues health alert

U.S. Embassy in Beijing. Photo: Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images

In the wake of reports that U.S. officials working at the consulate in Guangzhou are coming down with the same mystery illness that afflicted officials and their families working at the embassy in Cuba, the U.S. Embassy in China issued a health alert:

The State Department received medical confirmation that a U.S. government employee in China suffered a medical incident consistent with what other U.S. government personnel experienced in Havana, Cuba. As a result of additional voluntary medical screenings, the Department has sent other individuals to the United States for further evaluation.

If you or members of your family experience any unusual, unexplained physical symptoms or events, auditory or sensory phenomena, or other health concerns, please contact your health care provider to determine whether a medical evaluation and/or treatment is advisable. Symptoms to be attentive for include dizziness, headaches, tinnitus, fatigue, cognitive issues, visual problems, ear complaints and hearing loss, and difficulty sleeping.

8. China wants 2300 year-old manuscript back

Ian Johnson has a fascinating story in the Friday New York Times about the 2,300-year-old Chu Silk Manuscript that is now owned by the Arthur M. Sackler Foundation.

What's happening: A Chinese scholar has written a book tracing its provenance and the Chinese government wants the manuscript back. Johnson writes:

a prominent Chinese historian and archaeologist has pieced together its remarkable odyssey in a meticulously documented analysis that has caused a stir in the rarefied world of Chinese antiquities and raised broader questions about collectors who profit from pillaging historic sites.

The 440-page study traces the provenance from tomb raiders who discovered it during World War II, to an antiques dealer whose wife and daughter died fleeing Japanese troops, to American spies who smuggled it out of China and finally to several museums and foundations in the United States...

the silk manuscript is of special interest in China because it dates to the crucial Warring States period, when lasting Chinese traditions such as Confucianism and Taoism took shape. It is also important because it offers the earliest descriptions of the gods that Chinese worshiped in that formative period.

Buzz: Another New York Times journalist sees irony in the Sackler Foundation owning such an important Chinese work, given the depredations China once suffered from opium. (The Sackler family owned Purdue Pharma, which aggressively marketed OxyContin). NYT's Mike Forsythe tweeted: